फिल्म समीक्षा : गैंग्स ऑफ वासेपुर-स्क्रीन डेली-ली मार्शल
Gangs of Wasseypur
Dir: Anurag Kashyap. India. 2012. 318mins
Though it runs at over five hours, there’s never a
dull moment in this Indian gangland epic by one of India’s hottest indie
directors, Anurag Kashyap. Oozing visual style, laced with tight and
often blackly comic dialogue, bolstered by tasty performances and a
driving neo-Bollywood soundtrack, this Tarantino-tinged Bihari take on The Godfather
has what it takes to cross over from the Indian domestic and Diaspora
markets to reach out to action-loving, gore-tolerant theatrical and
auxiliary genre audiences worldwide.
With characters appearing and disappearing as the bloodshed takes its toll, Gangs is set to the rhythm of a fast-paced dance.
The broad canvas and the genre focus suits Kashyap well. The director’s previous outings, from No Smoking to That Girl in Yellow Boots,
feel a little like trial runs for this confident coming of age work,
which despite the extended running time is given discipline and focus by
the genre frame and the director’s deft control of gritty atmosphere
and jaded, street-smart tone.
It takes some initial effort for
non-Indian viewers in particular to make sense of the sheer weight of
exposition needed to get the story going and to remember who’s who and
how they’re all related, but voiceover, character-naming captions and
sparing use of flashback and flashforward help clear things up, and
after an hour so we know our way around. The film was split into two
reasonably self-contained parts of 160 and 158 minutes for its Cannes
Quinzaine debut, and maintaining this division into Gangs I and Gangs II would give reluctant exhibitors some Kill-Bill-style programming flexibility.
Wasseypur
is the district surrounding India’s coal capital, Dhanbad. It’s coal
that provides the story’s historical starting point, after an opening
baptism of fire sequence involving a gangland raid on a rival family
that will be reprised, and explained, around five hours later.
A
voiceover tells us that the story we’re about to see centres on two
rival Wasseypur clans, the Khans and the Qureshis. It’s not a religious
war - both are Sunni Muslim families – but a clan conflict born out of
old rancours and strategic alliances. Backtracking to 1940, the film
then uses a mix of voiceover, captions and action to charts the Indian
takeover of the lucrative Dhanbad coal mining industry following
independence.
Mine owner Ramadhir Singh (Dhulia) begins his rise
to business and political dominance of the area by securing a contract
to run a group of mines; he enlists former bandit Shahid Khan (Ahlawat)
as his muscle man, but after a falling out sends a hit man to wipe out
him and his family. However, Shahid’s son Sardar (played by Bajpayee
once he becomes an adult) escapes and is nurtured on the desire for
revenge against Singh, who has meanwhile become a powerful, corrupt
politician with the entire district under his sway.
The impulsive,
wily but not entirely bright Sardar rises to become a powerful
underworld boss, but is cowed by both his wives – Nagma (Chaddha), a
sort of youthful Mama Corleone who gives her husband three sons, and
initially simpering Durga (Sen), who shows her claws when Sardar
abandons her and her son Definite. The latter, together with Nagma’s
sons, serious Danish (Singh) and pot-smoking Faizal (Siddiqui) will
become the key players in the family dynasty after Sardar is eliminated
by the rival Qureshi clan – butchers by trade and by inclination.
The
script alternates engagingly between scenes of sometimes
stomach-churning violence and moments of domestic comedy, made more
tasty by hard-boiled lines of dialogue like “in Wasseypur even the
pigeons fly with one wing, because they need the other to cover their
arse”. Locations have a dirty realism, but lighting and a real feel for
colour matches keep things cinematic; it’s as if the camera keeps
searching for beauty and pathos amidst the squalor.
With characters appearing and disappearing as the bloodshed takes its toll, Gangs
is set to the rhythm of a fast-paced dance. Khanwalkar’s inventive,
adrenalin-driven soundtrack nails the pace beautifully, switiching
effortlessly between Spaghetti western trombone melodies and driving
electronica melds of hip-hop and traditional music. Characters sometimes
break into dance numbers, but these are always embedded in the action;
and the song lyrics often comment sarcastically on what’s happening
onscreen, as if mouthed by a Greek chorus of street punks.
Production companies: Tipping Point Films presents an AKFPL production in association with Jar Pictures
International sales: Elle Driver, www.elledriver.eu
Producers: Viacom 18 Motion Pictures – Guneet Monga, Sunil Bohra, Anurag Kashyap
Screenplay: Zeishan Quadri, Akhilesh, Sachin Ladia and Anurag Kashyap
Cinematography: Rajeev Ravi
Editor: Shweta Venkat Matthew
Production designer: Wasiq Khan
Music: Sneka Khanwalkar
Main cast: Manoj Bajpayee, Nawazuddin Siddiqi, Jaideep Ahlawat, Richa Chadda, Reemma Sen, Tigmanshu Dhulia
International sales: Elle Driver, www.elledriver.eu
Producers: Viacom 18 Motion Pictures – Guneet Monga, Sunil Bohra, Anurag Kashyap
Screenplay: Zeishan Quadri, Akhilesh, Sachin Ladia and Anurag Kashyap
Cinematography: Rajeev Ravi
Editor: Shweta Venkat Matthew
Production designer: Wasiq Khan
Music: Sneka Khanwalkar
Main cast: Manoj Bajpayee, Nawazuddin Siddiqi, Jaideep Ahlawat, Richa Chadda, Reemma Sen, Tigmanshu Dhulia
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